KEY NOTES

  • The most commonly used attendance metric by politicians, media, and the Ministry of Education is the 90% rule which measures what % of children currently attend 90% of school days (9 days each fortnight).
  • This attendance data from the Ministry of Education started in 2011.
  • From 2011 to 2018, only term 2 data was recorded, which is why it’s the only comparison we have a) over 10+ years and b) between governments.
  • From 2019, attendance data for all 4 terms was recorded. Attendance varies greatly between terms, which is why it’s best to plot/analyse each term separately, e.g. term 2 typically has the lowest attendance being winter.
  • It normally takes ~2.5 months for this data to be released. Term 2 data has a bit more information and is scheduled for release 4.5 months later.

KEY INSIGHTS

  • Term 3 2023 attendance was again below 50%. 1% lower than term 2 2023.
  • This is the lowest ever term 3 attendance score. It is significantly lower than the 2019, 2020, and 2021 term 3 figures, and fractionally lower than 2022.
  • Overall, school attendance has been steadily dropping since 2015
  • Attendance dropped significantly in 2022 for all 4 terms

KEY QUESTIONS

  1. Education is ranked the 9th most important issue by New Zealanders. Do you believe this is the correct priority position?
  2. Are these declining attendance rates a concern? If so, how much? If not, why not?
  3. How do we apportion the cause of these declining metrics between our:
    1. Covid response
    2. Education policies/governance
    3. Teacher-only days/strikes
    4. School closure days, e.g. bad weather
    5. Cost of living pressures
    6. Other social factors?
  4. Can we determine from this data that National-led Governments outperform Labour-led Governments on educational attendance?
  5. Why does it take 2.5 months for the term 1/3/4 data to be released, and 4.5 months for term 2? Should it be faster?
  6. How do we improve school attendance again? (Assuming we want to.)

HAVE YOUR SAY


FULL DATA ANALYSIS
Please contact us if you would like the full data set and research.

NOTES:

  • All publicly available years and terms have been published.
  • The data includes primary and secondary schools.
  • From the Ministry of Education:
    Submitting regular attendance data is voluntary. In Term 3 2023, 94.6% (2,291) of all schools and kura provided useable attendance data. This covers 97.2% of the student population in all state and state-integrated schools and kura on 1 July 2023.
    This may mean that the actual attendance across the entire population is lower or higher than this 46% figure.
  • Attendance reports are anonymous, so we can’t see which schools are performing best and worst.
  • The Ministry of Education has explained that it takes 4.5 months for the term 2 data to be released due to it being a more comprehensive data set, but say they are committed to improving this turnaround time.
  • From the Ministry of Education:
    • A student is counted as present on-site if they are on-site at any time during a day.
    • Similarly, a student is counted as off-site (learning at home) if they are recorded as learning at home at any time during a day.
    • If a student attends school for part of the day and learns from home the rest of the day, that student is counted in each category: once for attending on-site and once for learning at home. [Note from theFacts: this will inflate attendance levels slightly]
    • Students are not included as learning at home if:
      • they are unwell
      • they are absent due to parent concerns about the risk of contracting COVID-19, or
      • the absence is unexplained
  • There are many variables that impact school attendance, including:
    • Covid response/lockdowns
    • Education policies/governance
    • Teacher-only days/strikes
    • School closure days, e.g. bad weather
    • Cost of living pressures
    • Other social factors
  • Excel defaulted the maximum vertical axis range at 80%, and we felt it was fair to leave it as that since 100% attendance is never possible with sick leave and other sporting and family commitments.
  • We have plotted all term data on the same vertical plane. When we get time, we will work out how to shift this slightly into 4 quarters. As a citizen-funded and volunteer social initiative, we have limited resources.
  • We chose blue for National-led governments and red for Labour-led governments, being their party colours.
  • We use the Covid yellow stripes to represent that period of lockdowns.
  • All numbers are provisional and subject to revision.

Thank you to the Factors who helped pull this together.

SOURCES:

Data published by The Ministry of Education
(c) Crown Copyright
Licensed for use under the creative commons attribution licence (BY) 4.0

Did we make a mistake, or have you got smarter data?  Let us know.